I’m Scott, fly me!

One of Scott’s own illustrations imagining himself as Doctor Who travelling with wife Ana in the Tardis.

Words: Jeremy Miles Pictures: Hattie Miles

Scott Fellowes is showing me his favourite sonic
screwdriver. He takes aim and fires at his desk. There’s a burst of flashing
lights and buzzing sounds and I’ll swear that, just for a moment, this 41-year-old
Dorset college administrator actually turns into Doctor Who.

OK a moment ago he
was wearing a kind of frock coat, long striped scarf and a button bearing the
Gallifreyan symbol of the Time Lords,
the mystical Seal of Rassilon.

And he’s not exactly short of sonic screwdrivers either - he
has a huge collection. Even more impressively, this spare room in his otherwise
perfectly normal Poole flat is packed with Doctor Who memorabilia. Books, posters, magazines and DVDs line the
walls. There are model Daleks galore and more Tardi (assuming that is the
plural of Tardis) than you could shake a sink plunger at. There’s even a Time
Lord passport and countless other related nick-nacks.

In this 50th anniversary year of Doctor Who - the first
episode was broadcast on Saturday 23rd November 1963 - Scott’s extraordinary
collection seems to be coming into its own. “It’s great time to be a geek,” he
tells me. “We are having our moment in the sun.” His collection - almost 30
years in the making - also adds to a growing number of Doctor Who connections
boasted by the county of Dorset.

Wareham Quarry and various local sandpits were favoured
locations for alien landscapes in several early episodes. The 1983 adventure The Awakening starring
Peter Davison was filmed at Shapwick and Tarrant Monkton. Lulworth Cove
provided the backdrop for 1989’s The
Curse of Fenric and the old Warmwell
Quarry was the location for The
Survivor filmed the same year. In 2008
Dorset actor Julian Bleach memorably played the Doctor’s deadliest foe, the
hideously disfigured mad scientist Davros. Although the illusion of him being utterly evil was rather spoiled when I rang his mum and dad to ask how they felt about having spawned an inter-galactic destroyer. His father thought for a moment and then rather proudly told me that Julian was a born performer who had regaled aunts, uncles and other family members with a rendition of When Father Painted the Parlour, when he was just six-years-old.

Meanwhile the local connections continue. Any self-respecting Doctor
Who fan will tell you that Bournemouth
University has a full-size Tardis in the foyer of its School of Media Studies.
The 1960s police box time-machine is a nod to the personal and professional
interests of the department’s Associate Dean for Media Production, Dr Andrew
Ireland whose doctorate - Conditions
of Time and Space - was actually based
on Doctor Who. Even
the Sandworld sand-sculpture park at Weymouth has had the Doctor and the Daleks
as part of its summer display this year.

Scott himself says his first memory of Doctor Who involved
watching Tom Baker trying to save the world from annihilation in the 1970s
adventure The Seeds of Doom as a deadly mutant pod lumbered across lawns of Athehampton
House near Dorchester. “I think at the time I thought it was a giant green
octopus,” he recalls.”Whatever it was it was quite terrifying.” His imagination
piqued, he quickly locates the DVD to check out the picture on the cover. Sure
enough there is an image of alien vegetation looking decidedly giant squid-like
as it zaps the grounds of the 15th century mansion.

Everything relating to Doctor Who is at Scott’s fingertips
in this room. He calls it his study. His wife Ana calls it his play room.
“She’s right of course,” he sighs. “This is a boys playroom. I don’t much like
doing grown-up stuff. The thing is that
Ana’s a minimalist, she doesn’t like
clutter. I’m like an old professor. I like studies with lots of books and papers.
I just love stuff!”

They might not sound like the perfectly matched couple.
Indeed Scott’s just told me that, realising that he was planning to spend the
afternoon talking about Doctor Who, Ana has decided to go out. It is clear
however that they entered into this somewhat unconventional relationship with
their eyes wide open and have reached a very amicable understanding. “We met at a Star Trek group,” says Scott. “She thought I
was a complete geek and I thought she was a bossy little cow.” Somehow it
worked. They will celebrate 20 years together next year.

He jealously protects his Doctor Who collection. “I get
quite uncomfortable when other people come in here,” he admits. He visibly winces at the memory of his six
year nephew finding a set of Lego Daleks. He shakes his head sadly. “He de-masted three of them. I was quite
distraught. Ana simply said: ‘Well they’re not much threat to the universe now
are they?’”

When he’s not doing
his day job as an administrator at Bournemouth and Poole College, Scott works
at media events for MCM Comic Com - huge festivals that promote cult TV, comics
and games. Upwards of 60,000 people
attend these massive events held in London, Birmingham, Manchester and Glasgow
and Doctor Who is a big attraction. Despite his geeky credentials Scott his
wary of tabloid stereotyping. “We’ve done a lot of events and journalists always tend to focus
on the one spod in a Def Leppard T-shirt with a plaster on his glasses. I know
there are sad losers out there who live with their mum in a basement with a
laminated poster of Wonder Woman on the wall.
I just hope I’m proving I’m more of a human being.”

Over the past half-a-century eleven actors - William
Hartnell, Patrick Troughton, Jon Pertwee, Tom Baker, Peter Davison, Colin Baker,
Sylvester McCoy, Paul McGann, Christopher Eccleston, David Tennant and Matt
Smith - have played the Doctor. With the announcement in June that Matt Smith
would be leaving the role there were weeks of wild speculation about who would
appear when the character regenerated in the forthcomiong Christmas
special. Would the new Doctor be a
woman? Would he or she be black? As we
now all know Peter Capladi, male, white and best known as foul-mouthed
political spin doctor Malcom Tucker from the The Thick of It was the highly popular choice. It came as little
surprise to Scott Fellowes who had already told me that, knowing the
conservative tastes of the fan-base, a white British male actor would almost
certainly step into the role.

Even though one or two dissenters argued that, at 55,
Capaldi was too old, Scott heartily approves of his appointment. “I think it’s
good casting,” he told me. There was just a tiny note of regret. On display in
his room is a splendid self-drawn illustration showing the Doctors standing in
sequence from Hartnell to Smith plus, coming in at number 12, Scott himself.
“Well it would have been great, wouldn’t it?” he sighed when he realised that
it wasn’t to be. Scott harbours one other Doctor Who related desire. He’d love
to own a life-size Tardis just like the one at Bournemouth University. “I keep
thinking of making one,” he tells me.
“I’ve got the plans from the Tardis Builders Guild and everything but
I’m afraid Ana says no.”